The Congo Basin, located in the equatorial Africa, hosts the world's second largest, contiguous rainforests (Figure 1). While its annual rainfall (1,500-2,500 mm) is lower than that of the Amazon (1,800-3,200 mm) (Alsdorf et al., 2016), its rainy seasons in boreal spring (March-April-May, denoted MAM) and boreal fall (September-October-November, denoted SON) limit the dry seasons to about 3-4 months in summer (June-July-August, denoted JJA) and winter (December-January-February, denoted DJF), and thus help to sustain the rainforests (e.g., Staver et al., 2011;Mayer & Khalyani, 2011). These two rainy seasons are associated with the north-south migration of the rain belt over tropical Africa that crosses the Congo Basin (Nicholson & Dezfuli, 2013); however, the complex interactions between large-scale atmospheric circulation, mesoscale convective processes, and moisture availability from ocean and terrestrial sources drive their onset and demise (e.g., Nicholson, 2018). These mechanisms that control the variability and changes of the rainy seasons over the Congo Basin are thus poorly understood (e.g., Alsdorf et al., 2016;Nicholson, 2018), leading to large uncertainties in representing its current and future rainfall in climate models (e.g., James et al., 2018;Washington et al., 2013).Observations have shown that a decrease of rainfall and reduced terrestrial water storage in the Congo Basin have likely led to a decrease in vegetation greenness as well as widespread water deficits between 2003 (e.g., Reager et al., 2016Samba & Nganga, 2012;Zhou et al., 2014). Furthermore, the boreal summer dry season length has likely increased since the 1980s, mainly due to an earlier ending of the spring